
I have taught at Pepperdine University since Fall 2013, a few months after receiving my doctorate in history from University of Notre Dame. I am currently a tenured and associate professor of Great Books. Besides Great Books, I’ve taught lecture courses on Western civilization, US history survey, and Asian American history.
A historian by training, I have researched and published on South Vietnam as well as the postwar diaspora, especially on the subjects of Catholicism and anticommunism. I have published a number of journal articles and book chapters on these subjects.
Born in Vietnam–my name is spelled Hoàng Anh Tuấn in Vietnamese–I was a “boat person” refugee and lived in refugee camps for over a year before coming to the U.S. in 1982. I graduated from high school then a then-liberal arts college in Minnesota, where I majored in philosophy and enrolled in the Great Books honors program. (Sadly, my alma mater largely dropped the liberal arts in 2022 and shifted towards a STEM institution.) Between undergraduate and graduate studies, I lived and worked for ten years in Seattle, mostly as a live-in assistant among adults with intellectual disabilities at the L’Arche Noah Sealth community.
I also worked as a caterer at a small hospital in Seattle before attending graduate school. I received my doctorate in history from University of Notre Dame in May 2013, and began teaching at Pepperdine in August. I currently live in Orange County, whose Little Saigon has the largest population of Vietnamese outside of Vietnam.
Blog. I post on matters related to teaching, scholarship, current research, academia, plus interests such as music and food and occasional reflections on my personal history.
Why tuannyriver? In college, I lived in the seminary building on campus and worked in its kitchen. Washing dishes and pots and pans, however, fell to non-kitchen fellows who took turns on a weekly basis. Sometimes in my first year, one of the dishwashers, a junior, saw me nearby and spontaneously started singing Swanee River, a song by Stephen Foster from the 1850s and about the Suwanee River in the American South. It’s a charming song – here is a live and lively performance by Hugh Laurie, him of House fame – except that the junior sang it as, you guess it, Tuanny River.
It has stuck as a sobriquet of sorts, most conveniently as username for my email, Facebook, Twitter, old blog, and now this website. For his impromptu creation of this moniker–aren’t the best ones always created spontaneously?–I am forever indebted to Monsignor Mark Merdian of the Diocese of Peoria.
pc Ngoc-Diep Nguyen, taken at a conference on Vietnamese Americans at University of Oregon, October 2023.
May 17, 2022 at 7:02 pm
It is nice meeting you via your blog. As I searched for materials to write a term paper related to Baptist Mission in Vietnam, I came across two of your blogs. Thank you for writing and sharing your perspective. I am not a history major and have little knowledge of history. However, I am working on a history-related project with a focus on the Viet Baptist since I myself am a Baptist. If you are open and willing, may I contact you via email? My email is minh.huynh@selu.edu. I look forward to hearing from you.
February 8, 2023 at 9:42 am
Dear Mr. Tuanny river, I am hoping that your sanguine water will continue to flow and wash its goodness over our many souls thirsting for God grace and goodness in our world, and that Vietnam will cleanse herself from the evils of Communism. I live and Oakland and hope to meet you one day soon in OC. A Catholic whose family is devoutly Buddhist, I also hope that that the division in days of old (Pres. Diiệm demise following Thích Quảng Đức immolation and the ensuing Buddhist unrest in South VN) will stop to bring our motherland down the slippery slope of self-destruction.
February 6, 2025 at 10:58 am
Dear Tuan of Tuanny River, such a beautiful and meaningful story, since your escape. Having washed dishes for the college dorm and making many friends in the process, I can relate to that episode.
However, more related, I was in VN for AID 1966-1969, Hau Nghia and then Bien Hoa. I am alive today because my Vietnamese colleagues and the surrounding community protected me!
Yesterday, I attended the Rally to support USAID in Washington DC. I wore a sash with the colors of the old VN Flag, given me by a close Vietnamese friend, recently died (83). I was approached by a fellow whose family had escaped by boat who thanked me for trying to help his people. In return, I thanked him for his people/YOUR people protecting me.
I have my pictures and documents from Cu Chi and Trang Bang.
Oliver (Ong Rau) Davidson PriPubPart@aol.com
September 16, 2025 at 1:26 am
Hi, Tuanny River
I hope this email finds you well.
I’ve been a long-time admirer of your site and consistently enjoy the content you produce. I particularly appreciated this post: https://tuannyriver.com/2016/11/24/reading-about-food-drinks-3-sugar-tea-and-cockaigne/
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